Thanks for the kind words, folks! I do think that the case of Goof.. is similar to the B2F problem, but I also think that, just the same, it is unintentional. In this very volume, I think Sony has made the all-out attempt to give fans what they want (or wanted, or thought they wanted!
) with un-tampered-with shorts, and the novelty of 3d and widescreen (for the first time, ever on video!).
There are issues, we know, but the anomalies, likely, appear out of pure naiveté of and for the material. Beyond the framing problems, I have seen no instances of tampering, yet, with these shorts and there are numerous places where tweaks could have been made but,
Thankfully (with a capital Tee!), haven't! Like,
A Missed Fortune: extraneous audio when the shot changes to Larry doctorin' his pancakes! And no pitch-tweaking in
Scotched...
Now, to continue. This time, we have
Shot in the Frontier-- this short looks perfectly fabulous in the widescreen frame, as I think these pics will show.
Sony DVD, widescreen
| GoodTimes VHS, full frame
|
From the sprawling opening titles to, seemingly, panoramic views of all of the actors together onscreen, right down to the comedy mask of the end card, this short is all one big widescreen showcase. If this short suffers at all from the matting, it is simply due to the cinematography overshadowing the script! Is that OTT for a description? Not in my opinion. Look again at the photographic compositions above-- every single one is a winner, with great attention to detail, subject placement and viewer focus.
The Boys sure look better here*, in this low-budget short comedy, than in the slightly up-budget-B-picture-big-deal Gold Raiders. Marvelous!
*Yeah, opinion time.